Well-known member

Active member

I have a coworker who lost his job (senior progammer at Intel) and his wife over WOW. Another coworker's daughter met a guy in WOW, divorced her husband, and asked the guy she met in WOW to move in with her. No joke. Sometimes, people have to know their limits.

But this opens up a new opportunity: you can get rich and start a WOW addicts support group. I bet you'll get a lot of customers.

Floris

Guest

Never been interested in WoW, my friends tried to get me involved, so I have been slaying butterflies for 45 minutes and when I hit level 12 I jumped under a waterfall with 1% health and every time I spawn I die instantly. I comitted WoW suicide as soon as I could. Silly game, not for me.

Well-known member

Never been interested in WoW, my friends tried to get me involved, so I have been slaying butterflies for 45 minutes and when I hit level 12 I jumped under a waterfall with 1% health and every time I spawn I die instantly. I comitted WoW suicide as soon as I could. Silly game, not for me.

Same here. I had two accounts - a trial membership and then a bought the game (again, just for my ex) and Blizzard wasn't able to merge both accounts. I tried to login some months ago and it didn't work. So, goodbye forever.

Well-known member

I'm afraid to look at it, I'm so easily addicted. It's a miracle that I managed to avoid WOW. I hate to think how much time I've wasted saving various princesses. I try to stick the the MOTAS-type games these days, since at least they end at some point.